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International Roundup
An Irish High Court recently made news by ordering the
Refugee Appeals Tribunal (the ruling body for determining refugee status in
Ireland) to increase exposure by releasing their prior judgments on refugee
cases to the public. The order came at the behest of eight applicants, five of
whom were children, so that they could better prepare for their own refugee
applications. Justice John MacMenamin, the presiding judge in the matter, felt
that the tribunal exhibited behavior “unique in the common law
jurisdictions” and declared the refusal to be a breach of natural and
constitutional rights. Judging it unfair under the Immigration Act of 2003,
Justice MacMenamin further contended that an applicant to the tribunal has the
very same rights whether he be an Irish citizen or not.
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Ophir Pines-Paz, Interior Minister for the State of Israel,
recently organized an advisory committee to review Israel’s immigration and
nationality laws, reports Israel’s Ha’Aretz
newspaper. The committee, made
up of several foreign affairs and law scholars, will examine such statutes as
preserving the Jewish majority, limiting access to legal residency, and the
relationship between marriage and citizenship. Three of the committee’s
members served on an earlier advisory board, which recommended and enacted laws
governing permanent residency. After reaching conclusions, the committee will
make suggestions to a ministerial team who will then present the findings to the
Israeli government.
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